Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith

Christian sanctuaries are places of a unique contact between man and God. This article deals with shrines in Europe and North America (Washington, Guadalupe, Lourdes, Fatima, Czestochowa, Assisi, San Giovanni Rotondo, Santiago de Compostela). Such shrines have long been meeting places for people on...

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Main Author: Łukasz Wiśniewski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-09-01
Series:Church, Communication and Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2018.1537674
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spelling doaj-0af944fa795f4e2daaa8e18880e22af62020-11-25T01:05:48ZengTaylor & Francis GroupChurch, Communication and Culture2375-32342375-32422018-09-013319922010.1080/23753234.2018.15376741537674Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faithŁukasz Wiśniewski0The Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński UniversityChristian sanctuaries are places of a unique contact between man and God. This article deals with shrines in Europe and North America (Washington, Guadalupe, Lourdes, Fatima, Czestochowa, Assisi, San Giovanni Rotondo, Santiago de Compostela). Such shrines have long been meeting places for people on a pilgrimage of faith. This tradition still exists today, even if many sanctuary visitors primarily want to explore the cultural heritage or discover the sources of spirituality. This new trend has consequences for the pastoral services on-site. Therefore, it is significant that the Catholic Church’s Magisterium since the second half of the 20th century has invited the shrine rectors to make their sacred sites a place of the New Evangelization. This article explains how the message of faith that is communicated to believers by pastoral care, sacramental ministry and proclamation of the word of God could also be offered to cultural tourists and nonbelievers, in particular through art, architecture, music and the works of mercy. Here the study offers insights into how the recent Church documents emphasized Christian hospitality as a tool of evangelization. Finally, we analyze the new media communications of shrines (websites, social media channels) as opportunities for proclaiming the Gospel message.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2018.1537674Religious tourismshrinessacred artcultural heritagepilgrimagemixed interest tourismevangelizationsocial mediacommunication of the faithnew mediaworks of mercyhospitality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Łukasz Wiśniewski
spellingShingle Łukasz Wiśniewski
Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
Church, Communication and Culture
Religious tourism
shrines
sacred art
cultural heritage
pilgrimage
mixed interest tourism
evangelization
social media
communication of the faith
new media
works of mercy
hospitality
author_facet Łukasz Wiśniewski
author_sort Łukasz Wiśniewski
title Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
title_short Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
title_full Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
title_fullStr Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
title_full_unstemmed Religious tourism in Christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
title_sort religious tourism in christian sanctuaries: the implications of mixed interests for the communication of the faith
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Church, Communication and Culture
issn 2375-3234
2375-3242
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Christian sanctuaries are places of a unique contact between man and God. This article deals with shrines in Europe and North America (Washington, Guadalupe, Lourdes, Fatima, Czestochowa, Assisi, San Giovanni Rotondo, Santiago de Compostela). Such shrines have long been meeting places for people on a pilgrimage of faith. This tradition still exists today, even if many sanctuary visitors primarily want to explore the cultural heritage or discover the sources of spirituality. This new trend has consequences for the pastoral services on-site. Therefore, it is significant that the Catholic Church’s Magisterium since the second half of the 20th century has invited the shrine rectors to make their sacred sites a place of the New Evangelization. This article explains how the message of faith that is communicated to believers by pastoral care, sacramental ministry and proclamation of the word of God could also be offered to cultural tourists and nonbelievers, in particular through art, architecture, music and the works of mercy. Here the study offers insights into how the recent Church documents emphasized Christian hospitality as a tool of evangelization. Finally, we analyze the new media communications of shrines (websites, social media channels) as opportunities for proclaiming the Gospel message.
topic Religious tourism
shrines
sacred art
cultural heritage
pilgrimage
mixed interest tourism
evangelization
social media
communication of the faith
new media
works of mercy
hospitality
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2018.1537674
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